LYCOS RETRIEVER
Bad Boys
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Bad Boys II is a 2003 action comedy film directed by Michael Bay and produced by Jerry Bruckheimer. It stars Martin Lawrence and Will Smith. It is a sequel to the 1995 film Bad Boys.
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Led by perennial hot-dog director Michael Bay ("The Rock," "Armageddon," "Pearl Harbor"), "Bad Boys II" from the get-go is a movie on speed dial. The script's most often repeated word is "whoa!"
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Bad Boys: Miami Takedown is actually a natural extension of the Bad Boys franchise. In the way that Bad Boys 2 was an unnecessary and poorly made attempt to capitalize on the success of a movie that was never that great to begin with, Miami Takedown is an unnecessary and ugly attempt to capitalize on the success of those movies. Few licensed games manage to capture the spirit of its source material. Not Miami Takedown. It is brimming with the Bad Boy spirit of excessive swearing, bone headed violence, low brow humor, and being thrown together for an easy buck. It's about time that developers pay close attention to what they are adapting and truly expand upon the original experience.
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In Bad Boys: Miami Takedown, a new drug has emerged in Miami, and its use is spreading fast. As key members of the Tactical Narcotics Team (TNT), players take on the roles of either Mike Lowrey or Marcus Burnett and must stop the highly organized cartels that are flooding the market with this new drug. Players need to move fast to make sure the TNT cops are not DOA.
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Bad Boys is presented in the original theatrical aspect ratio of 1.85:1 in a flawless transfer. Sound (... unblemished) is in Dolby Digital 5.1 in English and Dolby Surround in Spanish. Subtitles are available in English, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Chinese, Korean, and Thai.
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Mike Lowery and Marcus Burnett of the Miami Tactical Narcotics Team are back and badder than ever in Bad Boys: Miami Takedown. Featuring the same fast paced action that's featured in the two Columbia Pictures films of the same name, Miami Takedown puts players in the roles of both Mike and Marcus as they travel through 13 different stages of violence. Fully destructible environments and multiple camera perspectives highlight a unique gameplay system that rates each officer based on their actions: making them either a Good Cop or a Bad Boy. Though originally released in Europe, Miami Takedown features slightly modified levels in comparison to the PAL version -- including stages that have been combined together to form all-new areas.
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